Facies investigations on sediment core CRP-3 from the Ross Sea, Antarctica, supplement to: Fielding, Christopher R; Naish, Tim R; Woolfe, Ken (2001): Facies architecture of the CRP-3 drillhole, Victoria Land Basin, Antarctica. Terra Antartica, 8(3), 217-224

The Cenozoic Victoria Land Basin (VLB) stratigraphic section penetrated by CRP-3 is mostly of Early Oligocene age. It contains an array of lithofacies comprising fine-grained mudrocks, interlaminated and interbedded mudrocks/sandstones, mud-rich and mud-poor sandstones, conglomerates and diamctites...

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Main Authors: Fielding, Christopher R, Naish, Tim R, Woolfe, Ken
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: PANGAEA - Data Publisher for Earth & Environmental Science 2001
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.1594/pangaea.510761
https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.510761
id ftdatacite:10.1594/pangaea.510761
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language English
topic Core wireline system
CRP-3
Sampling/drilling from ice
Cape Roberts Project CRP
spellingShingle Core wireline system
CRP-3
Sampling/drilling from ice
Cape Roberts Project CRP
Fielding, Christopher R
Naish, Tim R
Woolfe, Ken
Facies investigations on sediment core CRP-3 from the Ross Sea, Antarctica, supplement to: Fielding, Christopher R; Naish, Tim R; Woolfe, Ken (2001): Facies architecture of the CRP-3 drillhole, Victoria Land Basin, Antarctica. Terra Antartica, 8(3), 217-224
topic_facet Core wireline system
CRP-3
Sampling/drilling from ice
Cape Roberts Project CRP
description The Cenozoic Victoria Land Basin (VLB) stratigraphic section penetrated by CRP-3 is mostly of Early Oligocene age. It contains an array of lithofacies comprising fine-grained mudrocks, interlaminated and interbedded mudrocks/sandstones, mud-rich and mud-poor sandstones, conglomerates and diamctites that are together interpreted as the products of shallow marine to possibly non-marine environments of deposition, affected by the periodic advance and retreat of tidewater glaciers. This lithofacies assemblage can be readily rationalised using the facies scheme designed originally for CRP-2/2A, and published previously. The uppermost 330 metres below sea floor (mbsf) shows a cyclical arrangement of lithofacies also similar to that recognised throughout CRP-2/2A, and interpreted to reflect cyclical variations in relative sea-level driven by ice volume fluctuations ('Motif A'). Between 330 and 480 mbsf, a series of less clearly cyclical units, generally fining-upward but nonetheless incorporating a significant subset of the facies assemblage, has been identified and noted in the Initial Report as 'Motif B' Below 480 mbsf, the section is arranged into a repetitive succession of fining-upward units, each of which comprises dolerite clast conglomerate at the base passing upward into relatively thick intervals of sandstones. The cycles present down 480 mbsf are defined as sequences, each interpreted to record cyclical variation of relative sea-level. The thickness distribution of sequences in CRP-3 provides some insights into the geological variables controlling sediment accumulation in the Early Oligocene section. The uppermost part of the section in CRP-3 comprises two or three thick, complete sequences that show a broadly symmetrical arrangement of lithofacies (similar to Sequences 9-11 in CRP-2/2A). This suggests a period of relatively rapid tectonic subsidence, which allowed preservation of the complete facies cycle. Below Sequence 3, however, is a considerable interval of thin, incomplete and erosionally truncated sequences (4-23), which incorporates both the remainder of Motif A sequences and all Motif B sequences recognised. The thinner and more truncated sequences suggest sediment accumulation under conditions of reduced accommodation, and given the lack of evidence for glacial conditions (see Powell et al., this volume) tends to argue for a period of reduced tectonic subsidence. The section below 480 mbsf consists of a series of fining-upward, conglomerate to sandstone intervals which cannot be readily interpreted in terms of relative sea-level change. A relatively mudrock-rich interval above the basal conglomerate/breccia (782-762 mbsf) may record initial flooding of the basin during early rift subsidence.The lithostratigraphy summarised above has been linked to seismic reflection data using depth conversion techniques (Henrys et al., this volume). The three uppermost reflectors ('o', 'p' and 'q') correlate to the package of thick sequences 1-3, and several deeper reflectors can also be correlated to sequence boundaries. The package of thick Sequences 1-3 shows a sheet-like cross-sectional geometry on seismic reflection lines, unlike the similar package recognised in CRP-2/2A.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Fielding, Christopher R
Naish, Tim R
Woolfe, Ken
author_facet Fielding, Christopher R
Naish, Tim R
Woolfe, Ken
author_sort Fielding, Christopher R
title Facies investigations on sediment core CRP-3 from the Ross Sea, Antarctica, supplement to: Fielding, Christopher R; Naish, Tim R; Woolfe, Ken (2001): Facies architecture of the CRP-3 drillhole, Victoria Land Basin, Antarctica. Terra Antartica, 8(3), 217-224
title_short Facies investigations on sediment core CRP-3 from the Ross Sea, Antarctica, supplement to: Fielding, Christopher R; Naish, Tim R; Woolfe, Ken (2001): Facies architecture of the CRP-3 drillhole, Victoria Land Basin, Antarctica. Terra Antartica, 8(3), 217-224
title_full Facies investigations on sediment core CRP-3 from the Ross Sea, Antarctica, supplement to: Fielding, Christopher R; Naish, Tim R; Woolfe, Ken (2001): Facies architecture of the CRP-3 drillhole, Victoria Land Basin, Antarctica. Terra Antartica, 8(3), 217-224
title_fullStr Facies investigations on sediment core CRP-3 from the Ross Sea, Antarctica, supplement to: Fielding, Christopher R; Naish, Tim R; Woolfe, Ken (2001): Facies architecture of the CRP-3 drillhole, Victoria Land Basin, Antarctica. Terra Antartica, 8(3), 217-224
title_full_unstemmed Facies investigations on sediment core CRP-3 from the Ross Sea, Antarctica, supplement to: Fielding, Christopher R; Naish, Tim R; Woolfe, Ken (2001): Facies architecture of the CRP-3 drillhole, Victoria Land Basin, Antarctica. Terra Antartica, 8(3), 217-224
title_sort facies investigations on sediment core crp-3 from the ross sea, antarctica, supplement to: fielding, christopher r; naish, tim r; woolfe, ken (2001): facies architecture of the crp-3 drillhole, victoria land basin, antarctica. terra antartica, 8(3), 217-224
publisher PANGAEA - Data Publisher for Earth & Environmental Science
publishDate 2001
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1594/pangaea.510761
https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.510761
long_lat ENVELOPE(-70.467,-70.467,-68.950,-68.950)
geographic Ross Sea
Victoria Land
Cape Roberts
geographic_facet Ross Sea
Victoria Land
Cape Roberts
genre Antarc*
Antarctica
antartic*
Ross Sea
Victoria Land
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctica
antartic*
Ross Sea
Victoria Land
op_rights Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/legalcode
cc-by-3.0
op_rightsnorm CC-BY
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1594/pangaea.510761
_version_ 1766246330257113088
spelling ftdatacite:10.1594/pangaea.510761 2023-05-15T13:47:06+02:00 Facies investigations on sediment core CRP-3 from the Ross Sea, Antarctica, supplement to: Fielding, Christopher R; Naish, Tim R; Woolfe, Ken (2001): Facies architecture of the CRP-3 drillhole, Victoria Land Basin, Antarctica. Terra Antartica, 8(3), 217-224 Fielding, Christopher R Naish, Tim R Woolfe, Ken 2001 application/zip https://dx.doi.org/10.1594/pangaea.510761 https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.510761 en eng PANGAEA - Data Publisher for Earth & Environmental Science Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/legalcode cc-by-3.0 CC-BY Core wireline system CRP-3 Sampling/drilling from ice Cape Roberts Project CRP Collection article Supplementary Collection of Datasets 2001 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.1594/pangaea.510761 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z The Cenozoic Victoria Land Basin (VLB) stratigraphic section penetrated by CRP-3 is mostly of Early Oligocene age. It contains an array of lithofacies comprising fine-grained mudrocks, interlaminated and interbedded mudrocks/sandstones, mud-rich and mud-poor sandstones, conglomerates and diamctites that are together interpreted as the products of shallow marine to possibly non-marine environments of deposition, affected by the periodic advance and retreat of tidewater glaciers. This lithofacies assemblage can be readily rationalised using the facies scheme designed originally for CRP-2/2A, and published previously. The uppermost 330 metres below sea floor (mbsf) shows a cyclical arrangement of lithofacies also similar to that recognised throughout CRP-2/2A, and interpreted to reflect cyclical variations in relative sea-level driven by ice volume fluctuations ('Motif A'). Between 330 and 480 mbsf, a series of less clearly cyclical units, generally fining-upward but nonetheless incorporating a significant subset of the facies assemblage, has been identified and noted in the Initial Report as 'Motif B' Below 480 mbsf, the section is arranged into a repetitive succession of fining-upward units, each of which comprises dolerite clast conglomerate at the base passing upward into relatively thick intervals of sandstones. The cycles present down 480 mbsf are defined as sequences, each interpreted to record cyclical variation of relative sea-level. The thickness distribution of sequences in CRP-3 provides some insights into the geological variables controlling sediment accumulation in the Early Oligocene section. The uppermost part of the section in CRP-3 comprises two or three thick, complete sequences that show a broadly symmetrical arrangement of lithofacies (similar to Sequences 9-11 in CRP-2/2A). This suggests a period of relatively rapid tectonic subsidence, which allowed preservation of the complete facies cycle. Below Sequence 3, however, is a considerable interval of thin, incomplete and erosionally truncated sequences (4-23), which incorporates both the remainder of Motif A sequences and all Motif B sequences recognised. The thinner and more truncated sequences suggest sediment accumulation under conditions of reduced accommodation, and given the lack of evidence for glacial conditions (see Powell et al., this volume) tends to argue for a period of reduced tectonic subsidence. The section below 480 mbsf consists of a series of fining-upward, conglomerate to sandstone intervals which cannot be readily interpreted in terms of relative sea-level change. A relatively mudrock-rich interval above the basal conglomerate/breccia (782-762 mbsf) may record initial flooding of the basin during early rift subsidence.The lithostratigraphy summarised above has been linked to seismic reflection data using depth conversion techniques (Henrys et al., this volume). The three uppermost reflectors ('o', 'p' and 'q') correlate to the package of thick sequences 1-3, and several deeper reflectors can also be correlated to sequence boundaries. The package of thick Sequences 1-3 shows a sheet-like cross-sectional geometry on seismic reflection lines, unlike the similar package recognised in CRP-2/2A. Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctica antartic* Ross Sea Victoria Land DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Ross Sea Victoria Land Cape Roberts ENVELOPE(-70.467,-70.467,-68.950,-68.950)